When Your Car Isn’t the Only Thing Being Tracked

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New surveillance equipment is being made
Automated License Plate Readers (ALPRs)/Shutterstock

This story on a new generation of surveillance technology was originally published by Matt Alley, BlueCollarWriter Labor Media here. Please subscribe and support his work.

Most Americans have at least heard of license plate readers. Police cars have used them for years to identify stolen vehicles, locate wanted suspects, and recover missing persons. Many people have accepted that tradeoff, believing the technology simply photographs a license plate already visible to anyone driving down the road.

That assumption may soon become dangerously outdated.

A new generation of surveillance technology promises to do far more than read a license plate. Instead, it can detect and correlate the electronic signals constantly emitted by devices traveling with your vehicle—your cellphone, smartwatch, wireless earbuds, laptop, Bluetooth systems, even some components built into the vehicle itself. Rather than simply identifying a car, these systems can create what amounts to an electronic fingerprint unique to you and the people traveling with you.

That should concern every American regardless of political party.

The average person may shrug and say, “I’ll just leave my phone at home.”

If only it were that simple.

Modern life is built around connected devices. Your phone isn’t just a phone. It’s your GPS, banking app, emergency contact, work device, boarding pass, two-factor authentication key, and increasingly your wallet. Many newer vehicles constantly broadcast wireless signals of their own. Smartwatches, fitness trackers, wireless headphones, tablets, tire-pressure sensors, vehicle hotspots, and infotainment systems all contribute to a digital footprint that follows you whether you think about it or not.

Avoiding detection would require disconnecting yourself from technology in ways that are increasingly unrealistic for ordinary citizens.

That’s what makes this different.

Supporters argue the system doesn’t read your text messages or listen to your phone calls. That is true, and it’s an important distinction.

But privacy isn’t only about the content of your communications.

It’s also about your movements.

Knowing where you sleep, where you worship, where you seek medical treatment, where your children attend school, which political rallies you attend, which labor meetings you participate in, who you regularly travel with, and how often you visit someone can paint an extraordinarily detailed portrait of your life without ever reading a single message.

Metadata has become one of the most valuable forms of information in the digital age.

Constitutionally, the questions become even more troubling.

The Fourth Amendment protects Americans against unreasonable searches and seizures. Courts have generally held that a license plate displayed on a public road carries little expectation of privacy. But collecting millions—or billions—of data points over months or years to reconstruct a person’s life presents a very different question than an officer observing one vehicle on one afternoon. Congress, courts, and civil liberties organizations have increasingly recognized that mass surveillance raises legal and constitutional questions that traditional policing never contemplated.

The First Amendment could also be implicated.

People have the right to assemble, protest, join a union, attend religious services, or participate in political organizations without fearing the government is quietly building permanent databases documenting every meeting they attend.

Freedom of association means little if every association can be effortlessly cataloged.

There are practical concerns as well.

Who owns this information?

How long is it stored?

Who has access?

Can private companies buy it?

Can it be hacked?

Can innocent people be falsely identified?

History suggests these aren’t hypothetical questions. Large surveillance databases have been breached before, and mistaken identifications have already occurred with existing automated license plate systems.

Technology almost always advances faster than the laws governing it.

That’s exactly why public debate matters before—not after—these systems become commonplace.

This isn’t an argument against solving crimes. Law enforcement should have effective tools to find violent criminals, recover kidnapped children, and stop dangerous offenders.

But Americans have always insisted that public safety and civil liberty exist together—not that one permanently surrenders to the other.

The issue before us isn’t whether technology can make surveillance easier.

It unquestionably can.

The question is whether a free society should quietly accept a future where every trip, every passenger, every routine, and every relationship can be digitally mapped without most citizens ever realizing it.

That isn’t a conversation reserved for technologists or constitutional scholars.

It’s one every American should be having now, while we still have the opportunity to decide where the line should be.

Matt Alley,
BlueCollarWriter Labor Media

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